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This section describes the basic Dired commands to operate on one file or several files. All of these commands are capital letters; all of them use the minibuffer, either to read an argument or to ask for confirmation, before they act. All of them let you specify the files to manipulate in these ways:
Certain other Dired commands, such as ! and the ‘%’ commands, use the same conventions to decide which files to work on.
Commands which ask for a destination directory, such as those
which copy and rename files or create links for them, try to
guess the default target directory for the operation. Normally,
they suggest the Dired buffer’s default directory, but if
the variable dired-dwim-target is
non-nil, and if there is another Dired buffer
displayed in the next window, that other buffer’s directory
is suggested instead.
Here are the file-manipulating Dired commands that operate on files.
Copy the specified files (dired-do-copy). The
argument new is the directory to copy into, or (if
copying a single file) the new name. This is like the shell
command cp.
If dired-copy-preserve-time is
non-nil, then copying with this command
preserves the modification time of the old file in the copy,
like ‘cp -p’.
The variable dired-recursive-copies controls
whether to copy directories recursively (like ‘cp
-r’). The default is top, which
means to ask before recursively copying a directory.
Delete the specified files (dired-do-delete).
This is like the shell command rm.
Like the other commands in this section, this command
operates on the marked files, or the next
n files. By contrast, x
(dired-do-flagged-delete) deletes all
flagged files.
Rename the specified files (dired-do-rename).
If you rename a single file, the argument new is
the new name of the file. If you rename several files, the
argument new is the directory into which to move
the files (this is like the shell command
mv).
Dired automatically changes the visited file name of buffers associated with renamed files so that they refer to the new names.
Make hard links to the specified files
(dired-do-hardlink). This is like the shell
command ln. The argument new is the
directory to make the links in, or (if making just one link)
the name to give the link.
Make symbolic links to the specified files
(dired-do-symlink). This is like ‘ln
-s’. The argument new is the
directory to make the links in, or (if making just one link)
the name to give the link.
Change the mode (also called permission bits) of
the specified files (dired-do-chmod).
modespec can be in octal or symbolic notation,
like arguments handled by the chmod
program.
Change the group of the specified files to
newgroup
(dired-do-chgrp).
Change the owner of the specified files to
newowner (dired-do-chown). (On most
systems, only the superuser can do this.)
The variable dired-chown-program specifies
the name of the program to use to do the work (different
systems put chown in different
places).
Touch the specified files (dired-do-touch).
This means updating their modification times to the present
time. This is like the shell command
touch.
Print the specified files (dired-do-print).
You must specify the command to print them with, but the
minibuffer starts out with a suitable guess made using the
variables lpr-command and
lpr-switches (the same variables that
lpr-buffer uses; see Printing).
Compress the specified files
(dired-do-compress). If the file appears to be a
compressed file already, uncompress it instead. Each marked
file is compressed into its own archive.
Compress the specified files
(dired-do-compress-to) into a single archive
anywhere on the file system. The compression algorithm is
determined by the extension of the archive, see
dired-compress-files-alist.
Decrypt the specified files
(epa-dired-do-decrypt). See
Dired integration in EasyPG Assistant User’s
Manual.
Verify digital signatures on the specified files
(epa-dired-do-verify). See
Dired integration in EasyPG Assistant User’s
Manual.
Digitally sign the specified files
(epa-dired-do-sign). See
Dired integration in EasyPG Assistant User’s
Manual.
Encrypt the specified files
(epa-dired-do-encrypt). See
Dired integration in EasyPG Assistant User’s
Manual.
Load the specified Emacs Lisp files
(dired-do-load). See Lisp
Libraries.
Byte compile the specified Emacs Lisp files
(dired-do-byte-compile). See
Byte Compilation in The Emacs Lisp Reference
Manual.
Search all the specified files for the regular expression
regexp (dired-do-find-regexp).
This command is a variant of
xref-find-references (see Identifier
Search), it displays the *xref* buffer,
where you can navigate between matches and display them as
needed using the commands described in Xref
Commands.
If any of the marked files are directories, then this
command searches all of the files in those directories, and
any of their subdirectories, recursively, except files whose
names match grep-find-ignored-files and
subdirectories whose names match
grep-find-ignored-directories.
Perform query-replace-regexp on each of the
specified files, replacing matches for regexp with
the string to
(dired-do-find-regexp-and-replace).
This command is a variant of
xref-query-replace-in-results. It presents an
*xref* buffer that lists all the matches of
regexp, and you can use the special commands in
that buffer (see Xref Commands). In
particular, if you exit the query replace loop, you can use
r in that buffer to replace more matches. See
Identifier
Search.
Like with dired-do-find-regexp, if any of the
marked files are directories, this command performs
replacements in all of the files in those directories, and in
any of their subdirectories, recursively, except for files
whose names match grep-find-ignored-files and
subdirectories whose names match
grep-find-ignored-directories.
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